COSPAR ID | 1987-063A |
---|---|
SATCAT no. | 18222 |
Mission duration | 160 days, 7 hours, 25 minutes, 56 seconds |
Orbits completed | ~2,580 |
Spacecraft properties | |
Spacecraft | Soyuz 7K-STM No. 53 |
Spacecraft type | Soyuz-TM |
Manufacturer | NPO Energia |
Launch mass | 7,100 kilograms (15,700 lb) |
Crew | |
Crew size | 3 |
Members | Aleksandr Pavlovich Aleksandrov |
Launching | Aleksandr Viktorenko Muhammed Faris |
Landing | Yuri Romanenko Anatoli Levchenko |
Callsign | Vityaz (Knight) |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | 22 July 1987, 01:59:17[1] | UTC
Rocket | Soyuz-U2 |
Launch site | Baikonur 1/5 |
End of mission | |
Landing date | 29 December 1987, 09:16:15 | UTC
Landing site | 140 kilometres (87 mi) NE of Arkalyk |
Orbital parameters | |
Reference system | Geocentric |
Regime | Low Earth |
Perigee altitude | 297 kilometres (185 mi) |
Apogee altitude | 353 kilometres (219 mi) |
Inclination | 51.6 degrees |
Period | 91.0 minutes |
Docking with Mir[2] | |
Docking date | 24 July 1987, 03:31:23 UTC |
Undocking date | 29 December 1987, 05:58:00 UTC |
Soyuz programme (Crewed missions) |
Soyuz TM-3 was the third crewed spaceflight to visit the Soviet space station Mir, following Soyuz T-15 and Soyuz TM-2. It was launched in July 1987, during the long duration expedition Mir EO-2, and acted as a lifeboat for the second segment of that expedition. There were three people aboard the spacecraft at launch, including the two man crew of the week-long mission Mir EP-1, consisting of Soviet cosmonaut Aleksandr Viktorenko and Syrian Muhammed Faris. Faris was the first Syrian to travel to space, and as of June 2021, the only one. The third cosmonaut launched was Aleksandr Aleksandrov, who would replace one of the long duration crew members Aleksandr Laveykin of Mir EO-2. Laveykin had been diagnosed by ground-based doctors to have minor heart problems, so he returned to Earth with the EP-1 crew in Soyuz TM-2.[3]
Soyuz TM-3 landed near the end of December 1987, landing both members of the EO-2 crew, as well as potential Buran pilot Anatoli Levchenko, who had been launched to Mir a week earlier aboard Soyuz TM-4.